Wednesday, July 01, 2026

Dining at the Disneyland Hotel

I have a very fun piece of vintage paper ephemera for you today - a little foldout flyer (only about 5" X 3" when closed) touting the surprising number of places where guests could go to drink and dine. Everything from a casual coffee shop to something a little more sophisticated and "grownup". I really love this one!

There's the cover, with a stylized Sun, perhaps evoking an "endless summer" in SoCal. "The whole family will enjoy the California Dining Room". At the bottom, a "special menu for children" is mentioned, you can find these quite easily, a menu that doubled as a paper mask of Mickey's smiling face (they also had a Pinocchio mask at some point). I used to have several of them, until my visiting cousins decided that they were junk. Into the trash they went!


The item unfolds to reveal six panels on each side, each featuring a different establishment for refreshment and relaxation. I had no idea that the Disneyland Hotel had so many options!


Next to the aforementioned cover is the Monorail Bar (not to be confused with the Monorail Cafe), and the Crown and Pillow, where "you'll have a jolly good time". Many of these places emphasize the availability of alcohol, clearly something that the parents and conventioneers demanded after a long day. 


All of the graphics are great, but I especially like the art for the Disneyland Hotel Lounge. The Coffee House sounds like a place I'd want to go, perhaps to enjoy a nice club sandwich and maybe a milkshake. Next, take the "Looking Glass Elevator" (I've never heard that before) up to the "Top of the Park" in the Sierra Tower. So... was the elevator mirrored??


The obverse features six more cafes and restaurants.


Several mentions of the Marina help to date this flyer to post-Spring 1970, when that feature debuted. More cocktails could be had at the Palm Court Lounge and the Shipyard Inn, along with seafood, more English atmosphere, and even dancing in the Oak Room. I wonder if Anaheim locals ever went to these places even if they weren't staying at the Hotel? 


And the last three, starting with Blum's of San Francisco, the Sailmaker's Den (love some of these names), and The Country Kitchen, which had Mediterranean cuisine (surprisingly).


Somebody was selling a different version of this flyer on eBay a year or so ago; maybe someday I'll get one of these (because I love variations), but I'm very happy with the one I have.


5 comments:

  1. Major-
    Clearly, this was Anaheim's swanky location for ALL four meals of the day: Breakfast・Luncheon・Dinner・and Cocktails: From a Sidecar to a Caboose. Sign me up, now-!

    "...take the "Looking Glass Elevator" (I've never heard that before) up to the "Top of the Park" in the Sierra Tower. So... was the elevator mirrored??"

    The designers of the elevator's interior received the same memo as you did and surrounded the interior with mirrors - creating the world's only Glass Elevator which had no view-! These things happen sometimes...

    I had forgotten the Disneyland Hotel was home to an outlet of Blum's of San Francisco. It's interesting this brochure seems to be 'pushing' egg dishes, when they are famous for ice cream confections of all kinds, candies, and their famous Coffee Crunch Cake.

    After perusing thru all the food and beverage options available for guests, I miss the Wrather-owned property even more-!

    Thanks, Major.

    ReplyDelete
  2. Major, I hope you bricked your cousins up behind a wall. :-p

    Why, this is an outrage! None of these restaurants serve lunch! Just something called "luncheon"! ;-) If you ask me, I think Disney made up the word "luncheon" just to sound sophisticated and hoity-toity. (I know the word has been around for probably hundreds of years.) OK, I looked it up: A luncheon is a formal lunch. So I was right! Sophisticated and hoity-toity.

    Oh yeah... the fold-out flyer: With the groovy pink and orange coloration, this flyer must be from the seventies, as you said. Like you, I'm wondering why a place called "The Country kitchen" has "Mediterranean Cuisine In An Old World Setting". With a name like Country Kitchen, one would expect to have fried chicken, mac & cheese, and mashed potatoes on the menu. Instead, they probably had grape leaves stuffed with escargot. Or maybe the focus was on Italian cuisine? Like Spaghetti and pizza?

    The flyer does have a nice look to it. Although, the image of Mickey looks a little odd. Maybe he was drawn by a non-Disney artist just for this pamphlet.

    Thanks, Major.

    ReplyDelete
  3. Anonymous5:58 AM

    Now I want to eat (and drink!) my way through the Disneyland Hotel of olde!

    ReplyDelete
  4. Steve DeGaetano5:59 AM

    ^^ That's from me. :-)

    ReplyDelete
  5. Oh Major, I mourn the loss of your menus. I hope you sternly reminded your cousins to stay out of your stuff!

    This brochure is making me hungry. So. Many. Choices. If I lived close by, you can bet I’d come to the Hotel to eat, even if only for special occasions.

    I remember seeing the Monorail Bar, but of course never went inside. IIRC, the bar had a headlight in the end like a train. I don’t know if I could see that through a window, or just in pictures.

    I wonder if the Sailmakers’s Den was a play on the old expression “three sheets to the wind” for extreme overindulgence? But all the establishments have nice and evocative names. And two places with live music and dancing! I don’t think there is even one today where I live. No one knows how to dance anymore.

    You should buy the second one and frame them in same frame to show off the opposite sides. Thanks for sharing this!

    JG

    ReplyDelete